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Simán Bolívar University, Caracas, Venezuela
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Caracas, Venezuela
Corresponding author: maldana@usb.ve
| The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below. |
High-resolution aeromagnetic surveys over oil fields and magnetic susceptibility (MS) measurements in soils, sediments, and drill cuttings have been proposed as complementary or alternative means of exploration and assessment of hydrocarbon reservoirs. Some micromagnetic anomalies detected by these studies could be the likely result of the existence, at shallow depths, of authigenic magnetite and/or Fe-sulphides. It has been hypothesized that such magnetic minerals are the chemical byproducts of primary Fe-oxides exposed to a reducing environment induced by the underlying reservoir. Secondary magnetite could appear as spherical aggregates (framboids) of submicronic crystals identifiable by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The formation of these framboids seems linked either to inorganic chemical processes associated with the presence of hydrocarbons or to oil biodegradation.
In the last few years, we have examined the causal relationship between framboids of magnetic minerals and hydrocarbons via rock magnetic and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analyses of drill cuttings. The samples used have been taken at different depths (within the first 1500 m) of producing and nonproducing wells from two oil fields in southwestern Venezuela. We have complemented MS results with S-ratio logs, SEM, X-ray energy dispersion (EDX), IRM acquisition curves, and high-temperature susceptibility measurements. More recently we have also studied soil samples from an oil prospective area in western Venezuela, where rock magnetic and EPR results were compared with ethane gas analyses and remote sensing data.
| Rock magnetic studies in well samples from two oil fields |
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